Mr. Kim is a Deputy Director of the Directorate for Financial and Enterprise Affairs for OECD. He provides advice, strategic guidance and support to the Directorate’s work in the co-ordination and management of its programme of work and its Committees, Working Parties and Expert Groups. His main responsibilities include development of opportunities in the international investment agenda and development and promotion of OECD standards across a range of subjects, including investment, responsible business conduct, global value chains, anti-corruption, corporate governance and competition. He also promotes horizontal work and foster co-ordination and joint work with other areas of the Organisation.

Prior to joining the OECD, Mr. Kim worked for the Korea Institute for International Economic Policy (KIEP) since 1992, including twelve years as Director of international Studies and two years as Director of Research Planning and Coordination. He has held the position of Vice-President of the KIEP since March 2012 and also a Vice-Chair of the Korean National Committee for Pacific Economic Co-operation since March 2012. He was Secretary-General of the APEC Education Foundation from 2008-2012 and has also acted as expert to the APEC Secretariat for peer reviews of Chile and Mexico and as an economic advisor to the Korean delegates to the APEC Committee on Trade and Investment. He was Counsellor of International Economic Affairs in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MOFAT) between 1998 and 2000.

Mr. Kim, a Korean national, has an MA in Political Science from the Hankook University of Foreign Studies in Seoul and a Ph.D. in Economics from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.

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NEW DELHI—India’s government on Monday eased foreign-direct investment restrictions in several sectors to increase inflows, a move that also could pave the way for Apple Inc. to open its own stores in one of its main growth markets.

A surge in cross-border mergers and acquisitions boosted global foreign direct investment flows around the world last year to $1.76 trillion, the most since the 2008-2009 financial crisis, the United Nations said in a study.

The role of foreign direct investment into the continent remains significant: on average the government budgets of African countries currently depend on corporates domiciled in other countries for 14% of their funding.

China’s outbound direct investment (ODI )is expected to surpass $1 trillion for the first time in 2015, as slowing economic growth and rising internationalisation of Chinese business see more local companies investing overseas.

When the PM travels to the US this week to woo businesses there, one of the key facts that the government will be tomtoming about is the surge in foreign direct investment since Narendra Modi took over and how his personal touch has helped.

The total volume of foreign investments in the UAE, at present a regional base for over 500 international companies, exceeded $100 billion in the past 10 years, Minister of Economy Sultan bin Saeed Al Mansouri said on Wednesday.

NEW DELHI: India has emerged on top of the foreign direct investment league table, overtaking China and the United States, according to the FT data service.

About AIM

The Annual Investment Meeting (AIM) is an initiative from the UAE Ministry of Economy to be held in Dubai, United Arab Emirates from 9 – 11 April 2018 at Dubai World Trade Centre.

AIM is the region's first Emerging Markets FDI-focused event to offer a perfect blend of trade fair and intellectual features aimed at enriching Institutional, corporate and individual investors attending with a comprehensive set of guidelines for their future investment decisions in high growth regions.